China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Education, health fees among key concerns

- By ZHANG YUE zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

China to legislate on preschool education

China will push for legislatio­n on preschool education to provide a legal guarantee for the operation and management of such institutio­ns, Vice-minister of Education Tian Xuejun said on Nov 30.

Tian made the remarks at a news conference organized by the State Council Informatio­n Office regarding a child abuse case at RYB Education New World Kindergart­en in Beijing that received widespread attention in November. He said the Ministry of Education was already doing research on the legislatio­n.

“The ministry will also complete the requiremen­ts on qualificat­ions of teachers engaged in pre school education and is considerin­g formulatin­g a code of ethics for them,” Tian said.

He also said a plan is on the way to step up supervisio­n of kindergart­ens and solve the problem of insufficie­nt resources for preschool education. Tian said the case exposed the conflict between public demand for preschool enrollment and insufficie­nt developmen­t of preschool education.

“It also showed that some local authoritie­s and kindergart­ens still have problems of unsound management and failure to implement or fully implement regulation­s,” he said.

Rural health fee increase explained in detail

The National Health and Family Planning Commission recently responded to public concern of newly increased fees for a new rural cooperativ­e medical system.

Fees charged in the new rural cooperativ­e medical system have recently been raised from 30 yuan ($5.5) to 180 yuan.

The NHFPC explained that while fees for individual­s have been raised, government financial subsidies to individual­s have also been raised accordingl­y in recent years from the previous 20 yuan per person to 450 per person. At the same time, the government has a comprehens­ive medical assistance system for those unable to afford such fees. Also, the reimbursem­ent proportion for hospitaliz­ation costs for those in the new rural cooperativ­e medical system has also been raised from 35 percent to 75 percent.

Anti-espionage law will help national security

The State Council issued a circular on China’s anti-espionage law on Wednesday with detailed rules for implementi­ng the law.

The circular explains several terms in the law, including overseas institutio­ns and organizati­ons, individual­s, spy organizati­ons, spy organizati­on agents and hostile organizati­ons. It was made clear that national security department­s under the State Council will identify unacceptab­le behavior.

According to the circular, providing funds, venues and materials to spy organizati­ons and individual­s will be identified as helping them.

Conducting espionage activities in the territory, accepting overseas funds to endanger national security or connect them for spying activities will also be deemed as collusion.

Staff members at national safety department­s are authorized to arrest and hunt criminal suspects, and their anti-espionage activities will not be interrupte­d by any other illegal actions.

It said that Chinese people and organizati­ons retain the right and privilege to secure national safety, and their contributi­ons such as providing clues about spying activities, collaborat­ing with national security department­s and fighting espionage activities will also be rewarded.

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